We are on the verge of demonstrating that organic farming practices can make purpose, hope, people and capital return to the Western Australian Wheatbelt.

Introduction

Healthy landscapes and water systemsare the basis of our life.

They provide food, water, clean air, a stable climate, biodiversity, good health, security and happiness. However, one-fourth of the world’s land mass is seriously degraded from centuries of human activity.

Think: deforestation, overgrazing, overexploitation, the building of infrastructure and pollution. In economic terms, this incurs an estimated loss of more than USD 4.3 trillion per year. The good news is that this process can be reversed.

WHAT OTHER PEOPLE SAY

Testimonials

“Most of the top management journals remain focused on the firm, not the system. It’s essential for managers and academics to take a more systemic approach to landscape restoration, in tandem with the natural sciences and local people.”

“All people should benefit from restoration of the land, not just the land owners. Everyone.”

Piet KrugerSouth African farmer

“Water is a key resource for Port Elizabeth; essential for its people and industrial production. We believe that restoring the degraded landscapes upstream can help us secure that resource.”

Patrick KingRegional General Manager Sanlam, South Africa

“It’s possible to rehabilitate large-scale damaged ecosystems. So if we can rehabilitate large-scale damaged ecosystems – why don’t we do that?”

John D. LiuFilmmaker

“By locating forests, pastures and water bodies within the larger ecological, social and economic context, landscapes open up to meet a range of objectives that could address demands of preservation, conservation and exploitation.”

Jagdeesh RaoCEO Foundation for Ecological Security, India

“The 21st century will demand more than conservation, it will require us to invest in ecological restoration. Restoring our degraded landscapes and seascapes will foster long term resiliency, promote economic vitality and cultivate a shared vision for our future.”

Keith BowersIUCN CEM Ecological Restoration Group Lead, Biohabitats

“Degraded landscapes are underperforming common assets linked to many development priorities. And landscape restoration successes have often debunked two prevailing myths: that is takes too long and costs too much. Let’s now overcome the hurdles to scaling up and out.”

Luc Gnacadja Architect, former Executive Secretary of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification

“If we cannot conceive our natural and agricultural environments as a single unit, as a close symbiotic network where all the pieces fit perfectly together, we must be doing something fundamentally flawed. Each of us should undergo a deep reflection to understand that the only being that is expendable in our planet is the human being.”

“We require the specialized labor of men and women that work in the fields, because it is them who provide us with our food staples. We must recognize and honor the work of rural people. The quality of our future depends on their good work and on our collective ability to maintain a proper balance with the surrounding natural ecosystems.”

About Us

Commonland® believes that landscape restoration offers tremendous untapped opportunities for sustainable economic development. To demonstrate this potential, we develop landscape restoration projects that are based on business cases.

Multidisciplinary teams actively involve investors, companies and entrepreneurs in long-term restoration partnerships with farmers and land-users. Long-term commitment is important as it takes approximately 20 years – or one generation – to restore a landscape. Our holistic restoration approach combines and connects natural and economic landscape zones and delivers 4 returns®.

Our goal is to realize large-scale landscape restoration with local farmers, land-users and experts, based on sustainable 4 returns business cases. Our mission is to contribute to a large-scale landscape restoration industry, aligned with international policies and guidelines.Commonland contributes to the Bonn Challenge, a global effort to restore 150 million hectares of the world’s degraded and deforested lands by 2020.

Commonland consists of a foundation and two impact companies: 4 Returns Projects and 4 Returns Partners.

The foundation guards and develops the 4 returns restoration approach and works in close cooperation with scientific institutions, business schools, and experts from non-governmental organizations. We are also creating an Academy for Business and Landscapes with our mission partners to educate the next generation of business leaders.

4 Returns Projects develops local companies’ and farmers’ initiatives that grow landscape restoration projects. We work on sustainable business cases with different stakeholders in the field, taking all interests into account. To build on their present strengths, these local companies partner with existing initiatives.

4 Returns Partners provides advisory services to third parties that wish to implement long-term restoration projects. This way, we can share our lessons with others who want to accelerate the process towards a restoration industry.

Both 4 Returns Projects and 4 Returns Partners benefit from Commonland’s strong network which gives access to a variety of investors and banks.

Commonland is stimulating the development of dedicated funding structures.

Team

Willem Ferwerda

CEO

Willem Ferwerda has a long track record in ecology, biodiversity, conservation and business. He studied tropical ecology, agriculture and environmental science and is an expert in multi-stakeholder processes. When heading the Netherlands office of IUCN, the International Union for Conservation of Nature, he supported hundreds of local conservation and restoration projects in the tropics.

Besides being the founder of Leaders for Nature, an international business network on biodiversity and ecosystems, Willem Ferwerda is also board member and advisor of several institutions, and an executive business and ecosystem fellow at the Rotterdam School of Management – Erasmus University (Netherlands) and the IUCN Commission on Ecosystem Management (Switzerland). In 2010 he created the first agreement on ecosystems and biodiversity between the Netherlands Confederation of Industries and nature organizations. Willem has worked in Latin America, Africa and Europe.

John D. Liu

Ambassador

Following 15 years as a television news producer and cameraman for CBS News and other international television networks, John D. Liu made a decision to devote the rest of his life to understanding and communicating about the Earth’s natural ecosystems. This decision has led John to produce many ecological films including; “Hope in a Changing Climate”, “Green Gold”, “Because They’re Worth It”, “A Steppe Ahead”, “Forests of Hope” and many other films. John’s films have been shown on BBC, National Geographic, Discovery, Central Chinese Television and many other networks around the world. They have won several awards and continue to inspire people in all continents.

The importance of John’s work in furthering the understanding of Ecological Restoration has been recognized by a number of research fellowships including Visiting Fellowships from The University of the West of England, Rothamsted Research Institute, The Vrije University, Amsterdam, The International Union for the Conservation of Nature and most recently the Netherlands Institute of Ecology of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. John has presented over 350 times in all continents of the world including at the Royal Society in the UK, the Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences, Oxford University, among others.

John has received awards from the Society for Ecological Restoration, The Rotary Club International, The United Nations Forum on Forests and several other organizations.More information about John D. Liu here.

Michiel de Man

Strategy Director

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Business strategy, new business development, innovation, sustainability.

Michiel de Man provides Commonland with expertise in business development, strategy, innovation and sustainability. His drive is to build on the innovation power of enterprises to improve people’s lives and solve environmental challenges.

Previously, Michiel worked as a strategy consultant focusing on sustainability and innovation. Recently he worked as an innovation advisor at DSM and as a researcher in business and ecology at the Copernicus Institute of Utrecht University. Michiel holds a MA in Development Studies from Utrecht University and a MSc in Strategic Management from Erasmus University Rotterdam.

Alessandra Caine

Business Development

In 2013, Alessandra supported Commonland in the design of a multi-criteria selection tool for the identification of restoration projects suitable for the 4 returns approach. In 2014, she joined Commonland’s team in South Africa to investigate the criteria needed to design an effective monitoring framework for the first 4 returns restoration partnership. She is currently focusing on the monitoring and evaluation system for the 4 returns and on identifying innovative business ventures for the project pipeline.

Alessandra holds a bachelor degree cum laude in science and technology for environment and nature from the University of Trieste and a master’s degree cum laude in earth science and economics from the Vrije Universiteit of Amsterdam.

She is very motivated and enthusiastic about being part of this landscape revolution!

Astrid’s career has spanned many countries and species, with demonstrated skills to manage across disciplines and within highly charged political atmospheres across different cultures. She has served as a central figure in the recovery of two of the world´s most endangered mammals: the Iberian lynx in Spain and the black-footed ferret in North America.

Astrid´s work has earned her international recognition, including awards such as the Environmental Career Achievement Award granted by the Andalusian government. She was selected by El País as one of the top 100 people of the year across Spain and Latin America.

Danielle de Nie

Business Development

Danielle de Nie builds bridges in her work as a business developer at Commonland. She enjoys to establish smart connections between the worlds of conservation and business, and to see the results of successful ecosystem restoration projects. She is an experienced project leader and manages complex projects in the Netherlands and Europe.

Previously, Danielle worked as an expert in biobased economy and renewable energy, connecting business and biodiversity for IUCN NL and Natuur & Milieu. Danielle has also worked in South America, in sustainable land use and was engaged in Páramo conservation projects in Ecuador and Colombia.

Danielle holds an MSc in Physical Geography and Soil Science from the University of Amsterdam.

Dietmar Roth

Business Development

Dietmar is passionate about facilitating social change processes to build multi-stakeholder platforms and partnerships to create collective action. His focus is on creating transformation, and innovations that are owned by local stakeholders and supported by a solid scientific base.

Dietmar has a doctorate in history and holds additional degrees in Spanish, pedagogy and tourism. For more than 20 years, he has worked as a manager of a tourism enterprise, is president of the Sierra María-Los Vélez Natural Park (Almería, Spain), a member of the Surclio research group at Almería University, plus a member of the regional investigation center Instituto de Estudios Almerienses (IEA). Over the past nine years, Dietmar has also served as deputy mayor for the town of Vélez Blanco, also in Almería.

Sanne Kruijt

Business Development

Sanne Kruijt is currently working as a business developer in the Netherlands, identifying potential business cases for Commonland. She is passionate about the role of education in realizing a landscape restoration industry and is involved in setting up educational programs where business and ecology meet.

Sanne has previously worked with companies, NGOs and governments on identifying opportunities for sustainable sourcing in food & retail, circular economy and social entrepreneurship. She initiated and developed several courses at the University of Amsterdam focusing on the interface of science and business, where science students are challenged to come up with creative ideas and engage with different types of real challenges.

Sanne holds a BSc in Future Planet Studies from the University of Amsterdam, where she specialized in ecology and evolution, and studied Earth & Environmental sciences at Wageningen University.

Thekla Teunis

Business Development

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Bottom-up innovation, social entrepreneurship, corporate water strategy, building partnerships, sharing passion, building successful teams.

Thekla Teunis has a background in corporate strategy, focusing on water-energy-food challenges for multinational companies (McKinsey, Shell). Besides that, she is co-founder of a social enterprise in the Netherlands (Move). After a 2 month cycling trip in Asia in 2013, Thekla was struck by the status of the land and at the same time amazed by the number of opportunities to restore degraded land and turn it into valuable land again.

She is currently working as a business developer in South Africa, trying to demonstrate that it can actually be done; and makes business sense to do so. Thekla is also a member of the Global Shapers of the World Economic Forum, she holds a bachelor’s degree with honors in Language and Culture Studies and a bachelor’s and master’s degree with honors in Mathematics.

Caroline Brouwer

Communications

Caroline Brouwer is specialized in strategic marketing with particular focus on brand positioning. Caroline started her career in marketing in 1993 and has since held various international marketing positions.

She was Director Corporate Communications & Marketing at Pon Holdings, an international trading and service company engaged in a wide range of activities, representing leading manufacturers including Volkswagen and Caterpillar. In the position of International Marketing Manager for Polaroid, she was responsible for the implementation of the worldwide B-to-C marketing strategy in Europe, the Middle-East, Africa and Asia.

Denise Joosse

Communications

Denise Joosse is an energetic, positive minded and dedicated communications professional. She started her career in communications in 2010 after she had finished her studies in Utrecht, the Netherlands. Denise worked for various national and international companies in the commercial sector before she joined Commonland.

Denise brings along a passion for people and inspiration.

Hans Schut

Fund Development

Sustainability in all aspects is what Hans Schut drives. He has more than 10 years experience as a new business developer in the environmental and clean energy business, followed by 17 years as a banker and investor. As a former managing director of Triodos Investment Management, the impact-investing arm of the European Triodos Bank, he developed and managed various impact investment funds, active both in Europe and emerging markets.

Before joining Triodos Bank, he worked at an energy utility and at industrial companies. He holds a degree at the Delft Technical University of the Netherlands. Hans serves on the board of Sekem Holding in Egypt, a role model sustainable enterprise in organic products. Through his consultancy firm BDFC (business development and finance consult), he is supporting Commonland in developing its funding and project finance strategy.

Jim Mackintosh

Fund Development

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Strategy, structuring, finance, impact investment, business development

Jim brings more than ten years of business and corporate finance experience to the Commonland team in a role which combines both fund and project development. He is currently working on the overall funding strategy for Commonland, as well as helping to bring the many business cases underlying landscape restoration to an investment-ready stage.

Prior to joining Commonland, Jim was a director at KPMG Deal Advisory in the Netherlands and led the financial modeling practice. In the latter part of his career with KPMG, his focus was on sustainability-driven initiatives which included ways in which to connect the corporate and societal value that companies create (KPMG’s True Value methodology). JIm has also worked for KPMG in New Zealand and London.

Jim holds a PhD in chemistry from the University of Otago and co-owns, with his brother and father, a small Australian-based wine company.

Simon Moolenaar

Science & Education

Simon Moolenaar is a purpose driven sustainability professional who works on connecting science and business through (business school) education for ecosystem and landscape restoration. As a boundary worker and knowledge broker he enthusiastically mediates between academia, business, governments and NGOs to see sustainable results develop.

Previously, Simon worked at several environmental and agricultural consultancies acting in different roles as a strategic consultant, process and program manager.

Simon holds an MSc in Environmental Science & Management (Soil Quality Management) and a PhD in Agricultural and Environmental Sciences both from Wageningen University.

Dieter van den Broeck

Science & Education

Dieter Van den Broeck is passionate about facilitating social change processes to build multi sectorial/stakeholder platforms and partnerships to create collective action to restore resilient landscapes. Dieter brings strong experience and knowledge of the Theory U, ecosystem management and transdisciplinary knowledge production into the process, to create strong bottom based and top guided innovations.

Dieter’s focus is to create transformation and innovations that are owned by local stakeholders and supported by solid science. Dieter is also training himself to become a transformational coach to enable him to coach and build leadership capacity within landscape management, organizations, governments and businesses. Dieter is co-founder of the South African NGO called Living Lands.

Rietje Grit

Operations Manager

In the course of a long career in international cooperation and nature conservation, Rietje gained experience in the field working for Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Brazil and Zambia before joining International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) in the Netherlands. Within IUCN she was responsible for the long-term funding of smaller grants focused on ecosystem management. Her career took a new direction some years ago and she has since been active as a professional coach, assisting leaders of organizations in the global south to improve their management and leadership capacities.

Within Commonland Rietje is responsible for operational management of the organization including human resources policy and financial management.

Rietje is an accomplished classical pianist and sings as a soprano in the Amsterdam Bach choir.

Sammy Whenu

Finance & Operations

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Finance, Business Control, Operations, Education and Telecommunication

Sammy has extensive financial, operational, and managerial experience. He has worked for many profit and non-profit organizations such as Pax Ludens Foundation, Getronics, UPC, Webster University, Dutchtone (now T-Mobile) and African Management Services Company (AMSCO) functioning in different capacities within finance, operations and management.

Sammy obtained his B.Sc. in Business Administration from The Institute of Higher Professional Education in Delft, The Netherlands. He received a Master of Business Administration (MBA) from Webster University St. Louis, MO, U.S.A. His MBA focused on Financial Management and Management & Leadership. He is currently a board member at Pax Ludens Foundation.

Eva Fransen

Project Development

Eva Fransen is currently working as a project developer in the Netherlands, identifying potential business cases to protect and restore the typical Dutch peat-meadow landscape. She is passionate about telling the story of the soil, the landscape and people that work on the landscape everyday.

Eva has previously worked as a project manager for a Dutch environmental NGO, where she developed projects aimed at making sustainable food choices more attractive for people (e.g. campaigns, trademark development, communication) and assisting,farmers and corporations implementing and upscaling sustainable business cases. Previously, she was an economic researcher for The Netherlands Organization for Applied Scientific Research (TNO) and the University of Utrecht.

Eva holds a MSc in International Economics & Business from Utrecht University and a MSc in Environmental Sciences from Wageningen University.

Caroline van Tilborg

Man. Dir. 4 Returns Partners

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Climate finance, creating and monetizing environmental credits & benefits, strategic business development

Caroline is a performance oriented professional with a record of over 20 years of experience in the financial design & structuring, project development & implementation and management of renewable energy portfolios and landscape restoration projects in developing countries, including the carbon asset creation process and the associated trade in carbon credits.

Caroline is currently leading Commonland’s subsidiary 4 Returns Partners, specializing in partnering with clients in their endeavors to develop large-scale landscape restoration projects.

Prior to 4 Returns Partners, Caroline acted in various General Manager and Specialist Finance roles including CarbonQuest Australia, C-Quest Capital, Climate Change Capital, the World Bank and Rabobank International.

Caroline holds a masters in economics from the Rijks Universiteit Maastricht, The Netherlands.

Erica ten Broeke

Project Development

Erica brings more than fourteen years of international development experience, supporting project development within Commonland. She develops the funding strategy of multiple projects and brings business cases underlying landscape restoration to an investment-ready stage.

Erica has a background in international development cooperation, building flourishing communities in (post)conflict areas such as Afghanistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo. She has extensive experience in managing programs, both through local presences as well as in cooperation with local partner organizations. Most recently Erica worked on product and market development focusing on the US and the UK market.

Erica holds a MA in Business Administration from the University of Tilburg, where she specialized in corporate finance. She also holds a MA in Humanitarian Assistance from the University of Groningen. Next year Erica will obtain a BSc in Landscape Architecture from the Hogeschool van Hall Larenstein in Velp.

Wijnand Pon

Chair

Piet Wit

Deputy chair

Gerard van Hengstum

Treasurer

Maas Jan Heineman

General member

John Loudon

Secretary, executive board member

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John Loudon studied business economics at the Rijksuniversiteit Groningen. His love of nature and nature conservation and on a more commercial level, brand communication has led him to a diverse, yet very focused, career path. After producing Nature Documentaries for the cinema under the umbrella of the Savage Paradise Foundation, and being an owner of Holland’s largest Sponsorship Strategy agency, BrandWorlds Network, he developed the JL Social Responsibility Impact Scheme™, a tool for NGOs, GOs and businesses to better incorporate and execute Corporate Social Responsibility programs.

In the past 17 years Loudon has acted as an executive Board Member to the Peace Parks Foundation, creating cross-border parks throughout Southern Africa. Recently he became CEO to the COmON Foundation, the major funder of Commonland.

As an Executive Board Member he is assisting the Commonland team to reach its goals. Loudon also serves on the Board of the Prince Bernhard Nature Fund and Het Loo Royal Estate.

Louise Vet

General member

Céline van Asselt

Advisor to the board

Zamba Batjargal

International environmental policy

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Advisor to the Environmental Information Center of the Ministry of Environment and Green Development. Former Minister for Nature and the Environment of Mongolia. Received his PhD degree in physics and mathematics in 1978 from the Hydrometeorological State University, St. Petersburg, Russia.

Dr. Batjargal has more than 30 years experience working for the government entities in Mongolia dealing with environmental protection, nature conservation and hydrometeorological hazards. He has extended experience of work outside of Mongolia being engaged in international cooperation activities. Dr. Batjargal is the author of more than 90 papers and articles on meteorology, climate, water resource, disaster risk reduction, nature conservation, environmental and social sciences.

Dr. Batjargal was among the group of scientists from different countries who, by the request of the Convention on Biological Diversity, drafted the first version of the so called “ecosystem approach” in nature conservation, which was approved by CBD COP-5 in 2000. This concept is well known as an innovative proposal for managing biodiversity and land use and at present widely referred as the “Malawi Principles”. He also contributed to the expert level discussions on the credibility of the World Heritage List and the concept of outstanding universal value within the World Heritage Convention.

Sam Bruijnzeel

Hydrology, soil science

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Sampurno Bruijnzeel is a Professor on Land Use and Hydrology and international recognized specialist on tropical forest ecosystems, water and soils at the VU University, Amsterdam.

His area research area entails hydrology and biogeochemistry of tropical lowland rain forests, montane cloud forests and tree plantations; hydrological impacts of de- and reforestation; erosion and sedimentation, soil conservation and land rehabilitation, watershed management. He has worked in many countries in Latin America, Europe and Indonesia. Is specialist on land rehabilitation in degraded tropical catchments and the effects on dry season flows.

John Burton

Wildlife, land acquisition

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John Burton is founder and CEO of the World Land Trust, an innovative UK based international conservation organization, specialized in direct action on the ground, such as supporting land purchase by local organizations.

John has more than 30 years experience in international conservation, including working with Friends of the Earth and 12 years as Chief Executive of Fauna & Flora International. He set up the first TRAFFIC offices for IUCN and is author of a number of books, as well documentaries. John received an Honorary Doctorate from University Campus Suffolk in October 2012 in honor of his work for international environmental organizations.

Jesús Casas Grande

Landscape ecology

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Jesús Casas Grande studied forestry, hydrology, rural planning and agricultural law. He occupied several high positions in at the Central Spanish Government. Starting as profesor of the Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingenieros de Montes, he was director of several National Parques like the Doñana and Picos de Europa.

As Director National Parques and General Director Sustainable Development Rural Environment he was highly involved in the rural development of the Spanish country side. Today he is General Subdirector Programs at the ‘Instituto de la Mujer in Madrid. Among the many publications, Jesús Casas Grande coordinated the Master Plan of the Spanish ecological corridor system, and developed the first National Plan for Sustainable Rural Development.

Luc Gnacadja

Architecture, international policy

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Luc Gnacadja was Minister of the Environment, Housing, and Urban Planning in Benin from June 1999 to February 2005. As Beninese politician and architect he has an excellent and long track record in national and international environmental issues.

In 2007 Luc Gnacadja was appointed as Executive Secretary of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) by UN Secretary General Ban Ki‐Moon, after he was endorsed by the Bureau of the Conference of the Parties of the UNCCD. Gnacadja was awarded the Green Award 2002 by the World Bank.

Mike Jansen

International legal issues

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Mike Jansen started his career in 1992 as a lawyer and joined the Amsterdam office of Baker & McKenzie in 1995. Mike has been a partner of Baker & McKenzie since 2001. He has been head of the corporate practice from 2001 to 2006.

In 2006 Mike Jansen became a member of the Board of Baker & McKenzie Amsterdam and served as Managing Partner and Chairman of the Board from 2007 to 2010. As of July 2013 Mike Jansen again serves – next to his corporate practice – as Managing Partner and Chairman of the Board. He is a member of the Baker & McKenzie’s Regional Council and Policy Committee.

Geoff Lawton

Permaculture

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Geoff Lawton is an internationally recognized specialist and teacher in permaculture. Since 1995 he has specialized in permaculture education, design, implementation, system establishment, administration and community development. In 1996 he was accredited with the Permaculture Community Services Award by the permaculture movement for services in Australia and around the world.

Lawton established The Permaculture Research Institute Australia as a global networking centre for permaculture projects where he is managing director. His aim is to establish self-replicating educational demonstration sites to contribute halting the food and water crisis. He has currently educated over 6,000 students in permaculture worldwide.

Jane Madgwick

Ecology, policy, stakeholder management

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Jane Madgwick has a BSc in Human and Environmental Biology (York) and a MSc in Conservation (University College London); worked in ecology and conservation for around 25 years. Since 2004 CEO of Wetlands International.

Jane leads an international team to promote and demonstrate the role of wetlands management in sustainable development through a network of 20 offices in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe. In the past few years, the organization has grown significantly and greatly increased its visibility and impact in the field of community-based environmental management and poverty reduction.

Pauline van der Meer Mohr

Governance, business

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Pauline van der Meer Mohr holds the Chair of the Erasmus University Rotterdam Executive Board. Her portfolio includes strategic policy, sustainability, international affairs and external relations, for one thing with the region of Rotterdam, the business community and other knowledge institutions.

After studying Law at Erasmus University Rotterdam and at the European University Institute in Florence, Van der Meer Mohr began her career in advocacy. Moving on she worked at Royal Dutch Shell, TNT and ABN Amro. Board member of DSM.

Meiny Prins

Business and eco-agro-technology

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Meiny Prins is CEO of the Priva Group, a world leader in developing and supplying sustainable technologies for the control of indoor environments within horticulture and the built environment. Was Business Woman of the Year 2009 and won the first Cleantech Star of WWF.

She devotes herself to promoting business sustainability and the international development of (greenhouse) horticulture and is a much sought-after authority in this field, and members of the Dutch government consider her to be a leading voice on sustainability issues. Ms. Prins is a member of the Dutch Trade Board and of the technology industry entrepreneurs’ association, she is a member of the Supervisory Board of Triodos Bank, and she is co-initiator of developments related to the Greenport.

K.H. Moon

Business, sustainability

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K.H. Moon is President & CEO of New Paradigm Institute and Hansoll Textile in South Korea. He was CEO of Yuhan-­‐Kimberly, one of the most admired companies in Korea, for 1995 ‐ 2007. Moon founded the “Keep Korea Green Movement” in 1984, creating numerous eco-­‐friendly initiatives for students, newly‐weds and civil leaders. He also founded many cross‐sector non‐profit organiza1ons including “Forest For Life”, “Forest For Schools”, “Forest For Peace”, “Northeast Asian Forest Forum”, and “Seoul Green Trust” in the past 3 decades.

Moon was awarded by UNEP with “Global 500 Roll of Honor” in 1997, by Chosun‐Iibo/ Mainichi Newspaper with “Asian Environmental Award” in 1998, and by Korean Government with “Gold Medal Order of Industrial Service Merit” in 2005. Moon was also elected as “The Most Admired CEO of Korea” many times through 2000′s and was chair of the 10th meeting of the UNCCD Business Forum in 2011.

Robert Reibestein

Business

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Robert Reibestein was senior partner of McKinsey & Company until 31 December 2011. For almost 30 years he served leading financial institutions in Europe and Asia.

Mr Reibestein led McKinsey’s practice in Amsterdam, was then responsible for its Global Banking and Securities Practice and most recently he led McKinsey’s offices across Europe, Middle-East and Africa. He is also Chairman of the Supervisory Board of Royal Concertgebouworkest, Vice Chairman of Leiden University and member of the Board of the WWF NL and ING Bank.

Herman Rosa Chávez

Governance, environmental policy

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Herman Rosa Chávez was Minister of the Environment and Natural Resources in El Salvador between 2009 and 2014. He studied Engineering, Economics and International Relations and worked for more than 30 years as an engineer and in environment and development issues.

Under his visionary leadership, climate change and ecosystem restoration came to be considered a critical development issue for El Salvador. He reframed environmental policy and spearheaded a major transformation of the Ministry of the Environment and its intervention strategies, so that it plays a more influential role in policy formation and is closer to the concerns of ordinary citizens and local governments. It resulted in 2012 in a new National Environmental Policy which seeks: “To Reverse Environmental Degradation and to Reduce Vulnerability to Climate Change”.

In 2012 Herman Rosa Chávez launched the National Landscape and Ecosystem Restoration Program, which has as its goal the restoration of 1 million hectares, or 50% of the country’s territory.

Mehmet Serdar Sarýgül

Restoration, business

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Mehmet Serdar Sarýgül (1961) is director of TEMA Foundation, the largest organization on reforestation in Turkey. He graduated from the Middle East Technical University, Department of Biological Sciences, Richmond College in England.

Mr Serdar Sarýgül has been working in the food sector for many year before he joined TEMA. He had several positions in general management and board and member of the board at Unilever, Bayer, Gillette, Barilla (Filiz food) in Turkey and abroad. ‘Soil life and business will work to protect the soil’, he said.

Pavan Sukhdev

Economics of ecosystems

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Pavan Sukhdev was Study Leader for the G8+5 commissioned project on The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB). A career banker, Pavan then took a sabbatical from the Bank to lead TEEB & the Green Economy Initiative for UNEP. While at Deutsche Bank, Pavan had founded (2006) and then chaired Global Markets Centre – Mumbai, a leading-edge front-office offshoring company.

Pavan is Founder-CEO of GIST Advisory, a specialist consulting firm which helps governments and corporations Discover, measure, value, and manage their impacts on natural and human capital. He is a Visiting Fellow at Yale University, where he was awarded the 2011 McCluskey Fellowship and wrote his book “Corporation 2020″. Earlier, he was Special Adviser and Head of UNEP’s Green Economy Initiative, and lead author of their report “Towards a Green Economy”.

Pita Verweij

Restoration ecology

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Pita Verweij is Professor in Land Use and Biodiversity at the Utrecht University, Copernicus Institute. Throughout the years, Pita Verweij’s principal field of research has been land use and biodiversity in the context of natural resource management. She worked in a wide range of tropical ecosystems, from lowland forests to mountain grasslands, and from semi-arid to extremely humid.

In recent years, she strengthened the link between the development and application of ecological knowledge and policy-making in her work. This is demonstrated by her research on the valuation of biodiversity and ecosystem services, and the development of ecological knowledge that addresses problems in nature conservation and spatial planning.

Herman Wijffels

Banking, sustainability

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Herman Wijffels, Dutch economist and former CEO of Rabobank, is a widely recognized authority on sustainability, business and governance. He worked between 1981 and 1999 at the Rabobank, ultimately as CEO. From 1999 – 2006 he was chairman of the Dutch Social-Economic Council, an independent and influencial advisory body of the government.

From 2006 to 2008 Herman Wijffels was director and Dutch representative at the World Bank in Washington. Between 2006-2007 he lead the negotiations between the political parties to create a new Dutch government. Since 2009 Herman Wijffels is professor ‘Sustainability and Societal Change’ at Utrecht University.

He chaired and led several innovative initiatives and committees, including the World Connectors and the Sustainable Finance Lab, to reform the banking sector. Some of those initiatives are carrying his name, such as the Herman Wijffels Innovation price.

Mantang Cai

Restoration ecology, forestry

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Prof. Dr. Mantang Cai is deputy Director of Beijing Development Institute of Beijing University in China. His main research areas are environmental policy and integrated watershed management. He studied agriculture, forestry, land use and natural resource management at the Central-South Forestry University (China), Oxford University (UK) and Indian Forestry Institute (India).

Cai Mantang worked at the Chinese Academy of Forestry from 1983 to 1996 in areas of plantation for energy, agroforestry, community-based natural resource management, and rehabilitation of degraded forestland. From 1997 – 2000, he worked at the International Network For Bamboo and Rattan as the Special Assistant to the Director General and Program Director (Outreach).

Sara Scherr

Landscape management, business

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Dr. Sara Scherr is an agricultural and natural resource economist specializing in land management policy in tropical developing countries. She is the Founder of EcoAgriculture Partners and currently serves as its President and CEO. In 2011 she led the founding of the Landscapes for People, Food and Nature Initiative, for which EcoAgriculture Partners now serves as secretariat. Prior to the creation of EcoAgriculture Partners, Dr. Scherr held positions as Director of Ecosystem Services at the non-profit Forest Trends; adjunct professor at the University of Maryland; co-leader of the CGIAR Gender Program; senior research fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute; and principal researcher at the World Agroforestry Centre.

She received her BA in Economics at Wellesley College, and her MSc and PhD in International Economics and Development at Cornell University. As a scientist she is widely published in scientific and policy literature and has been a leading voice globally in promoting the restoration of degraded agricultural lands and new approaches for integrated landscape management.

Rui Li

Soil and water conservation

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Rui Li is a professor at the Institute of Soil and Water Conservation (ISWC), CAS/MWR and NWUAF. He has been president of the World Association of Soil and Water Conservation (WASWAC) since 2011, and is currently editor-in-chief of the International Soil and Water Conservation Research (ISWCR).

Rui has been involved in research on soil and water conservation, land resources investigation, land-use planning, and the monitoring/evaluation of soil erosion/control using remote sensing since 1972. In 1994-2001, he served as deputy director of ISWC, and was promoted to director in 2002, where he remained until 2006. His main research fields include: comprehensive control of soil erosion at small watershed and regional scales; remote sensing image processing and extraction of soil erosion/control factors/measures; regional investigation/planning of soil and water conservation, and regional impacts of soil erosion/conservation on the environment.

He has led more than 30 completed projects and has had more than 120 papers published in journals and at international conferences. As both chief editor and co-editor, he has had 12 books published.

Aart van den Bos

Social Entrepreneur

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Aart has over 20 years of professional experience in more than 20 countries in Latin America, Africa and Asia as a social entrepreneur and international development practitioner. He holds an MBA Global eCommerce from Rotterdam School of Management.

In the early stages of his career Aart worked for the Dutch Government Agency of Entrepreneurship, which stimulated private sector investments in R&D and innovation. Through his own company, Verbos Business Development, Aart is currently managing projects and setting up new businesses in several countries, with a focus on enhancing sustainable agriculture and mitigating negative environmental and social impacts, while recognizing the need for economic viability. Additionally, Aart is a co-founder of Soil & More International, an organization which supports farmers around the world in implementing sustainable farming approaches that consider regenerative farming systems including incentive models. Aart van den Bos is an active board member in numerous organizations dedicated to positive social and/or ecological development.

Alexander Zeverijn

Business planning, governance

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Alexander Zeverijn is a social entrepreneur engaged in business driven development opportunities and impact investments in East Africa.The prime focus of his work is protected area business planning and governance. Recently he worked as the general manager for several land use planning, funding and capacity building programs for protected areas in Kenya and Tanzania, and also as an expert advisor to various NGO’s on role definition and performance improvement.Previously, Alexander worked as an infrastructure developer focusing on airports. Alexander holds a LLM in Law from Groningen University and a MBA from INSEAD, Fontainebleau.

Cora van Oosten

Capacity development, training, research

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Cora van Oosten is a human geographer with approximately 25 years of international experience in landscape approaches, governance, and participatory planning. She has worked as senior advisor, project manager and team leader, for various organizations, usually on long term assignments in Africa (Kenya, Burkina Faso, Ghana), Latin America (Bolivia) and Asia (Cambodia).

At present, Cora is employed as senior project leader at Centre for Development Innovation, Wageningen UR, where she is in charge of a project portfolio related to landscape approaches, governance, and capacity development. Within this area, she has developed a keen interest in the restoration of degraded landscapes in the tropics. By combining her trainings, project implementation and research activities she has developed a growing body of knowledge on how landscapes can be restored in an economically viable and socially acceptable way.

All Cora’s work is characterized by a high level of participation and multi-stakeholder learning, often supported by web-based learning and social media. What Cora likes about Commonland is its emphasis on the role of the private sector. Private companies, so she says, have a responsibility in landscape restoration. Especially those companies engaged in global commodity chains have to start perceiving their sourcing areas not only as extraction areas, but also as areas of investment.

Ian Banks

Business intelligence, carbon economics

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Ian Banks is a specialist in carbon economics, climate change policy and conservation finance. He has experience working on these topics at McKinsey, providing expertise to clients and contributing to reports on environmental sustainability and resource productivity. He has also worked as a researcher on an NGO report on the economics of complementary medicine; for the European Commission on trade issues, including access to HIV/AIDS drugs; and for the Welsh Assembly government on agricultural and environmental economics. He has also been a member of charity expeditions to Chile and Mongolia.

Ian is now working with the Ellen MacArthur Foundation on a toolkit for governments to stimulate the transition to a circular economy. He has a BA (Hons) in economics from Durham University, England and has studied carbon finance at the London Business School.

Ilse Hennemann

Capacity development, action research

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Ilse Hennemann is a human geographer and environmental sociologist in the areas of integrated landscape management, environmental governance and multi-stakeholder processes in the wider eco-agricultural landscapes. Her expertise lies in capacity development, which entails the development of those capacities that are needed to design, develop and facilitate restoration projects at landscape level. She is passionate about bringing different stakeholders together and encouraging them to collectively learn from each other.

John van Duursen

Entrepreneurship, climate-smart-agriculture

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John van Duursen is a business developer with the purpose to restore and protect our planet through innovative business models and disruptive (but smart) thinking.

He has over 10 years experience as entrepreneur and program manager in the field of impact investing, SME development, climate-smart-agriculture and sustainable supply chains, building better and greener businesses.His track record includes founding the BiD Network, setting up ‘the Nature Challenge’ with WWF, professionalizing and managing the ‘Green Entrepreneurship Program’ at Hivos and accelerating the ‘restorative value chain’ through managing ProClimate. John holds (M)BA’s in International Business and Environmental Management.

Jose Maria Rabade

Environmental Evaluator and Forester

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Jose Maria Rábade Blanco developed during the last 35 years an intensive activity into the Spanish public sector, particularly the business public sector, where he became top executive, tackling issues relates to strategy consulting, natural, urban and industrial environment, governance and rural development, in national and international projects, this leading position allowed him to span a global professional vision on the challenges and opportunities that sustainable development represents.

Kim van der Leeuw

Entrepreneurship, climate science, carbon

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Kim van der Leeuw is a business developer with one clear goal in mind: building better business. He has over 10 years experience in renewable energy, carbon markets, impact finance and social entrepreneurship.

He worked on projects in over 20 countries. His track record includes making the 2010 world cup in South Africa more climate neutral through LED lighting, developing programs for clean cook stoves in Africa, and managing a large safari company’s positive impact activities.Building better business also manifests itself in his entrepreneurial drive. Kim is the proud co-founder of WakaWaka, who’s light is changing lives from Haiti to Syria.

Li An Phoa

Holistic learning, multi-stakeholder processes

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Li An Phoa is a passionate systems-thinker engaged in research, holistic learning and creation for vital food, water, and landscapes. She initiates and facilitates multi-stakeholder processes. She works with large organizations such as Unilever and the Rwandan Ministry of Health, as well as innovative farmers, artists and indigenous communities.

Li An teaches at Rotterdam School of Management, Nyenrode Business University, Schumacher College and co-founded Spring College teaching hundreds of people outdoors about ecology and economy.

Marlon Sahetapy

International marketing, business development

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Based in London, Marlon provides Commonland with expertise on international marketing, business development, product structuring, governance and capital raising, areas in which he has fifteen years of global experience.Marlon was a Director at Hermes Fund Managers Ltd, which is owned by the UK’s largest pension fund, the BT Pension Scheme Ltd, and an Investment Principal at Aureos Capital, a private equity manager exclusively focused on the emerging markets.

Paulus Ingram

Private market investment

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Paulus is Senior Portfolio Manager Opportunity Fund and Hedge Funds at APG Asset Management and has 15 years of investment and asset management experience primarily in private market investments.

Patrick de Buck

Entrepreneurship, partnerships

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Technician and social entrepreneur. Has worked for many years setting up local partnerships with communities in sustainable agriculture in West Africa. Is based in Belgium.

Sabine Biesheuvel

Social innovation, online collaboration

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Sabine Biesheuvel is a digital and cultural anthropologist and a firm believer of an inclusive economy of the crowd that benefits landscapes and people alike. She combines her passion for people, social collaboration and co-creation with business innovation, systems thinking and sustainability.

Sabine holds a MSc in Cultural Anthropology and Development Studies with a focus on social capital and migration. She has worked for the commercial sector (mainly financial institutions) on implementing social business and mass online collaboration and is active for several networks that deal with social innovation and large scale interventions such as Open Space, World Cafe and Future Search.

Samira Omar Asem

R&D, natural resources

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Dr. Samira Omar Asem is a Principal Research Scientist in the Kuwait Institute for Scientific Research. Dr. Omar obtained her PhD in Wild Land Resource Science in the year 1990 from the University of California, Berkeley. Currently she is the Program Director for a project entitled “Management Support and Technical Supervision of Kuwait Environmental Remediation Program for Kuwait National Focal Point”.

Dr. Omar has more than 40 years of R&D experience in conservation and sustainable development of renewable natural resources such as; monitoring and assessment of terrestrial environments, establishment of protected areas, rangeland management, control of mobile sand, rehabilitation of degraded rangelands, agriculture master planning, soil survey, GIS application, livestock aerial census, sustainable land-use planning and environmental claims.She has United Nations consulting work experience on environment and agriculture. She contributed to 30 refereed journal papers; 27 books and chapters, 80 proceedings and 103 technical reports. She is a technical consultant and editor of scientific documents who participated in 120 conferences.

Stef van Dongen

Innovation, venture philanthropy

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Stef van Dongen is an entrepreneur who founded several impact-driven companies of which Enviu is the mother organization. His passion is to activate professionals to co-create business ideas that address global social and ecological issues and turn these ideas into scalable start-ups. Stef is board member and advisor of several companies and innovation networks.

Steven de Bie

Business and eco-agro-technology

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Prof. Steven de Bie is a scientist and businessman, a generator of ideas and a freethinker. Always on the lookout for opportunities, out-of-the- box, creative, realistic, challenging; feasible in business terms, better for biodiversity and other challenges facing society as we move towards a sustainable future.Steven is adjunct professor in Sustainable Use of Living Resources at Wageningen University and until recently manager strategic environmental partnerships at Shell International. The prime focus of his work is biodiversity and ecosystems: how can biodiversity loss be halted without harming economic development.

Steven is an ecologist, with degrees from Groningen and Wageningen Universities.

Network

Commonland works in close cooperation with internationally leading organizations.

World Business Council for Sustainable Development

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The World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) is a CEO-led organization of forward-thinking companies that galvanizes the global business community to create a sustainable future for business, society and the environment.

Through its members, the Council applies its respected thought leadership and effective advocacy to generate constructive solutions and take shared action to drive business action on sustainability in the coming decade and beyond.

The WBCSD aims to be the leading voice of business that will support companies in scaling up true value-added business solutions and in creating the conditions where more sustainable companies will succeed and be recognized. Action2020 is the WBCSD’s platform for sustainability in action. It’s the roadmap for how businesses can positively influence environmental and social trends while strengthening their own resilience to issues like climate change, demographic dynamics and skills shortages. Based on the latest scientific consensus, Action2020 sets an agenda for businesses to take action on sustainable development to 2020 and beyond.

The WBCSD is a mission partner of Commonland, as both share the vision that companies and investors should be actively involved in ecosystem restoration and management. The work of Commonland contributes to WBCSD’s Ecosystems & Landscape Management Cluster.

United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification

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Established in 1994, the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) is the sole legally binding international agreement linking environment and development to sustainable land management. The Convention addresses specifically the arid, semi-arid and dry sub-humid areas, known as the drylands, where some of the most vulnerable ecosystems and peoples can be found.

The Convention’s 195 parties work together to improve the living conditions of people in drylands, to maintain and restore land and soil productivity, and to mitigate the effects of drought. The UNCCD is particularly committed to a bottom-up approach, encouraging the participation of local people in combating desertification and land degradation. The UNCCD secretariat facilitates cooperation between developed and developing countries, particularly around knowledge and technology transfer for sustainable land management.

The mission of the UNCCD on restoration and soil rehabilitation and poverty alleviation is aligned with the Bonn Challenge and with Commonland’s mission.

United Nations Environment Programme

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United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), established in 1972, is the voice for the environment within the United Nations system. UNEP acts as a catalyst, advocate, educator and facilitator to promote the wise use and sustainable development of the global environment.

UNEP work encompasses assessing global, regional and national environmental conditions and trends, developing international and national environmental instruments, and strengthening institutions for the wise management of the environment.

The mission of the United Nations Environment Programme on ecosystem restoration is aligned with the Bonn Challenge and with Commonland’s mission.

Global Partnership on Forest and Landscape Restoration

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The Global Partnership on Forest and Landscape Restoration was launched in 2003 by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and the Forestry Commission of Great Britain. Since then, more than 25 governments and international and non-governmental organizations have joined. It is a proactive network that unites governments, organizations, communities and individuals with a common goal: restoring the world’s degraded and deforested lands.

The partnership was initiated with the purpose of catalyzing and reinforcing a network of diverse examples of restoration of forests and degraded lands that deliver benefits to local communities and to nature, and fulfill international commitments on forests.

Commonland is a member of the partnership with the objective to share information amongst the partnership members and to contribute to the goal of the Bonn Challenge with the 4 returns approach and concrete projects in the field.

Economics of Land Degradation

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The Economics of Land Degradation (ELD) Initiative is a global initiative on the economic benefits of land and land-based ecosystems. It aims to increase political and public awareness of the economic costs and benefits of healthy and productive land. The secretariat of the initiative is hosted by Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH.

The initiative highlights the value of sustainable land management and provides a global approach for analysis of the economics of land degradation. It aims to make the economics of land degradation an integral part of policy strategies and decision-making by increasing political and public awareness of the costs and benefits of land and land-based ecosystems.

The ELD vision is to transform global understanding of the economic value of productive land based on both market and non-market values, and to improve stakeholder awareness for socio-economic arguments to improve sustainable land management, prevent the loss of natural capital, preserve ecosystem services, combat climate change, and address food, energy, and water security. The ELD methodological approach will translate economic, social and ecological knowledge into topical information and tools to support improved policy-making and practices in land management suitable for policy makers, scientific communities, local administrators and practitioners, and the private sector.

As mission partner, ELD provides Commonland access to its methodology and network of experts on the economics of land degradation.

Wageningen University

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To explore the potential of nature to improve the quality of life is the mission of Wageningen UR (University & Research Centre). A staff of 6,500 and 10,000 students from over 100 countries work everywhere around the world in the domain of healthy food and living environment for governments and the business community at large.

The strength of Wageningen UR lies in its ability to combine the strengths of specialized research institutes and Wageningen University. It also lies in the combined efforts of the various fields of natural and social sciences. This union of expertise leads to scientific breakthroughs that can quickly be put into practice and be incorporated into education. This is the Wageningen Approach. As a mission partner, several Wageningen UR institutes and experts are involved in ecosystem restoration and rehabilitation.

IUCN Commission on Ecosystem Management

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The Commission on Ecosystem Management (CEM) is one of the six scientific commissions of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

The IUCN CEM is a network of volunteer experts, numbering 1,000, from around the world working on ecosystem management-related issues, for example climate change adaptation, disaster risk reduction, Red List of Ecosystems, fisheries and ecosystem restoration and services.

The Commission works closely with other IUCN commissions, such as the Species Survival Commission and the World Commission on Protected Areas, as well as IUCN regional offices and global thematic programs. The IUCN Global Ecosystem Management Programme (EMP) is the focal program for CEM, which provides secretariat and technical support. Commonland staff are taking part in CEM’s thematic working groups on ecosystem restoration and business involvement. The international secretariat is based in Gland, Switzerland.

IUCN CEM is one of the founding fathers of Commonland. The Commission offers Commonland guidance and advice and gives access to IUCN’s worldwide database on ecosystems and network experts.

Rotterdam School of Management – Erasmus University

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Over the past 40 years, Rotterdam School of Management – Erasmus University (RSM) has firmly established its reputation as one of Europe’s leading business schools.

RSM offers a distinctive intellectual culture. They believe that leadership can be taught through a combination of intellectual and practical challenges, and that the difficulties one encounters when working in diverse teams foster creative new approaches in business. They enjoy a reciprocal, supportive relationship with multinational companies and encourage a flexible, broad and sometimes iconoclastic mindset in matters of business practice and research.

This distinct approach has helped RSM to establish a portfolio of top-ranked programs, as well as one of the world’s largest and most prolific management faculties.

Rotterdam School of Management – Erasmus University is one of the founding fathers of Commonland, because they understand the importance of ecosystems in future business propositions.

Together with RSM and Wageningen University & Research Centre, Commonland aims to set up a center of expertise dedicated to ecosystem restoration, located in the business school. RSM advises Commonland on business cases and makes available its international network of top-notch business schools.

COmON Foundation

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The COmON Foundation is a private initiative, established with the purpose of delivering a concrete contribution to the process of nurturing nature, education and employment. The COmON Foundation supports the development of populations in poor countries by establishing – in regions where such potential is inherently present, step-by-step – the basic conditions for the development of a healthy natural environment, education and a basic infrastructure in order to enable the next steps in development, such as the productivity of farming and cattle raising, forestry and vegetable growing and trade in agrarian products.

The COmON Foundation works exclusively in the form of projects with a clear objective, measurable results and completion within a predefined time-span. This is usually a period of approximately 5 years.

The vision and ambitions of the COmON Foundation are deeply rooted in Commonland. As one of the founding fathers of Commonland, they support the Commonland mission with financial support and access to their private investors network.

ASN Bank

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As a sustainable bank since 1960, ASN Bank wants to make an active contribution to social processes that promote the long-term sustainability of society. They have been formulating long-term goals at the strategic level for some time now. These goals will allow them to incorporate their mission in all their activities. In wording their long-term goals, they base themselves on the three pillars of their sustainability policy: climate change, human rights and biodiversity.

ASN Bank’s mission is: ‘ASN Bank is a company committed to promoting the sustainability of society and is guided by that commitment in its commercial conduct’. They aim to achieve this mission by increasing sustainability in both their office organization and their investments. The latter is essential, as the impact they have on a sustainable future through their ‘balance sheet activities’ – ASN Bank’s investments and the investments of the ASN Investment Funds and ASN Asset Management – is many times larger than the influence exercised by their office organization. Since the start in 2013, ASN Bank has supported Commonland’s mission and its 4 returns approach in the Netherlands.

The DOEN Foundation

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As a promoter of people and organizations that take the lead in the field of sustainable, cultural and social innovation, DOEN believes in a green, socially inclusive and creative society. DOEN supports these innovators and brings them into contact with each other.

Annually, DOEN supports more than 200 initiatives by means of subsidies, participations, loans and guarantees. These initiatives are characterized by their enterprising approach: people, organizations and enterprises that dare to take risks that are creative and innovatory and thus effectively contribute to a better and cleaner world. DOEN supports initiatives in the field of Culture and Cohesion and Green and Inclusive Economy.

As an initial supporter, DOEN participates in realizing the establishment of Commonland’s work in South Africa and Spain.

Hivos

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Hivos is an international development organization guided by humanist values. Together with local civil society organizations in developing countries, Hivos wants to contribute to a free, fair and sustainable world. A world in which all citizens – both women and men – have equal access to opportunities and resources for development and can participate actively and equally in decision-making processes that determine their lives, their society and their future.

Hivos is committed to people in Africa, Asia and Latin America who are systematically blocked from rights, opportunities and resources. One of the guiding principles of the Hivos philosophy is strengthening the social position of women.

As an initial supporter, Hivos is committed to working together with Commonland on realizing 4 returns projects with their partners.

Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs

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The Dutch government, represented by the Ministry of Economic Affairs and the Ministry of Infrastructure and Environment, is committed to Commonland’s mission, as part of its policies on climate smart agriculture, biodiversity conservation and restoration, sustainable trade, business development, green infrastructure and water management. In several embassies of the Netherlands, staff members are willing to participate in the network.

The Ministry of Economic Affairs has supported Commonland’s mission and the 4 returns model since 2015.

Dutch Ministry of Infrastructure and Environment

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The Dutch government, represented by the Ministry of Economic Affairs and the Ministry of Infrastructure and Environment, is committed to Commonland’s mission, as part of its policies on climate smart agriculture, biodiversity conservation and restoration, sustainable trade, business development, green infrastructure and water management. In several embassies of the Netherlands, staff members are willing to participate in the network.

The Ministry of Infrastructure and Environment has supported Commonland’s mission and its 4 returns approach since 2013.

Triodos Bank

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Triodos Bank is one of the world’s leading sustainable banks. Their mission is to make money work for positive social, environmental and cultural change.

More specifically, Triodos Bank is in business to help create a society that protects and promotes the quality of life of all its members and that has human dignity at its core; to enable individuals, organizations and businesses to use their money in ways that benefit people as well as the environment and promote sustainable development; and to offer their customers sustainable financial products and high-quality service.

Triodos bank has given international support to Commonland’s mission and its 4 returns approach since the start in 2013.

Charles Darwin Foundation

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The Charles Darwin Foundation for the Galapagos Islands (CDF) is an international not-for-profit scientific organization. The CDF has been working in the Galapagos since 1959 with a clear mission to provide scientific knowledge and assistance to ensure the conservation of the Galapagos.

The CDF works closely with the Galapagos National Park Directorate – the main local government environmental authority – overseeing the safeguarding of the islands’ natural resources, and providing the results of scientific research to conserve this living laboratory. The organization’s staff is 90% Ecuadorian and CDF is committed to training Galapagos residents as future scientists for the good of the islands and the country at large.

The CDF is implementing a restoration project on the Galapagos based on the 4 returns approach of Commonland. Commonland contributes to CDF’s long-term vision for the Galapagos.

Ecoagriculture Partners

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Landscapes are mosaics of natural and human-modified ecosystems. They provide multiple benefits, such as food, rural livelihoods and wellbeing, energy, fibers and building materials, medicines, ecosystem services and biodiversity.

As a form of integrated landscape management, ecoagriculture affirms the value of supporting these benefits in a way that reinforces synergies. In the past, the goals of ecoagriculture were often perceived to be in conflict. But many integrated landscape initiatives practicing ecoagriculture have shown how conservation, agriculture and development can co-exist or even positively affect each other.

This process requires collaboration or coordination between diverse stakeholders who are collectively responsible for managing key components of a landscape. EcoAgriculture Partners uses an integrated approach to enhance rural livelihoods, conserve biodiversity and improve agricultural productivity.

EcoAgriculture Partners is supporting the mission of Commonland. Commonland is a strategic partner of EcoAgriculture Partners and also participates in the Landscapes for People, Food and Nature Initiative (www.landscapes.ecoagriculture.org).

EEMP

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The Environmental Education Media Project (EEMP) is dedicated to researching and communicating globally about functional and dysfunctional ecosystems. This is in order to envision the way forward for humanity to survive in a world with intact ecosystems.

The EEMP understands the problems facing humanity and their root causes and disseminates information about well-tested solutions through film and multimedia-presentations. It is founded by John D. Liu, Commonland’s ambassador and colleague in outreach and media.

EEMP is able to do this since John D. Liu has made himself responsible for communicating about these critical problems and solutions, roving around the world constantly to reach new audiences with these little-known truths. As he moves, he comes across ever more case studies of degradation and restoration, and this feeds into a constant interplay of ecosystem-related scientific learning and practical interventions with learning partners. The EEMP then captures and leverages visual imagery and explanations translated into many languages to show governments and international agencies, policy makers and different interest groups not only how it is possible to restore the land-based ecosystems of this planet, but to point out countless benefits that logically follow for human wellbeing.

Foundation for Ecological Security

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The Foundation for Ecological Security was set up in 2001 to reinforce the massive and critical task of ecological restoration in India. The Foundation strives for a future that is based on a holistic understanding of the principles that govern the interrelationships of various life forms and natural systems.

The essence of these efforts lies in intertwining principles of nature conservation and local self-governance in order to accelerate ecological restoration, as well as to improve the living conditions of the poor.

Global Footprint Network

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In 2003, Global Footprint Network (GFN) was established to enable a sustainable future where all people have the opportunity to live satisfying lives within the means of one planet. Their work aims to accelerate the use of the Ecological Footprint — a resource accounting tool that measures how much nature we have, how much we use, and who uses what.

The efforts of GFN are fueled by a future vision in which human demand on nature is monitored as closely as the stock market. They provide the scientific data necessary to drive large-scale, social change.

GFN gives insight into the ecological footprint of companies and investors. This insight can help companies and investors get involved in or invest in restoring ecosystems.

ISRIC – World Soil Information

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ISRIC – World Soil Information is an independent, science-based foundation. The institute was founded in 1966 following a recommendation of the International Soil Science Society (ISSS) and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). It has a mandate to serve the international community by providing information about the world’s soil resources to help address major global issues.

ISRIC has been the ICSU World Data Centre for Soils since 1989, is a member of the Open Geospatial Consortium and collaborates with a wide range of partners worldwide. ISRIC operates on three priority areas: soil data and soil mapping, application of soil data in global development issues and training and education.

As one of Commonland’s scientific partners, ISRIC provides the necessary soil science and data needed to implement restoration activities on the ground.

IUCN

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The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) is the world’s oldest and largest global environmental organization. Its mission is to influence, encourage and assist societies throughout the world to conserve nature and to ensure that any use of natural resources is equitable and ecologically sustainable.

IUCN is involved in data-analysis, research, field projects, advocacy, lobbying and education. The organization has observer and consultative status at the United Nations, and plays a role in the implementation of several international conventions on nature conservation and biodiversity. It is best known to the wider public for compiling and publishing the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, which assesses the conservation status of species worldwide.

IUCN is hosting the Bonn Challenge. It supports Commonland’s mission, and is one of the founding fathers through the IUCN Commission on Ecosystem Management.

Leaders for Nature

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Leaders for Nature is the business engagement network of twenty multinationals and major Dutch enterprises working together on greening the economy, founded by the Dutch office of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

By offering knowledge and training, hands-on project support and inspiration, Leaders for Nature stimulates and facilitates companies to take the lead in this transition and incorporate natural capital in their core business.

Since its foundation in 2005, the Leaders for Nature network has connected more than 1,200 professionals from various management levels with other member companies, NGOs, governments and academic institutions, resulting in corporate action plans and joint programs. In 2012, Leaders for Nature launched its second network in India.

The Leaders for Nature network provides Commonland access to companies that are interested in working on ecosystem restoration.

Living Lands

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Living Lands is a South African not-for-profit organization for conserving and restoring living landscapes.

A living landscape consists of a variety of healthy ecosystems and land uses, and is home to ecological, agricultural, and social systems that are managed so as to function sustainably. This ensures that natural and cultural resources are available for future generations and that the system is resilient for adaptation to climate change.

Their mission is to bring synergies and added value to the landscape through promoting living landscapes, mobilizing civil society for sustainability, enabling and facilitating social learning processes and fostering mutually beneficial partnerships and participatory networks.

Living Lands supports Commonland’s mission and works together with Commonland in South Africa.

Netherlands Institute of Ecology

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The Netherlands Institute of Ecology is one of the largest research institutes of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Its core task is to conduct basic and strategic ecological research that meets the highest international standards.

The scientists at the Netherlands Institute of Ecology perform basic and strategic ecological research on individual organisms, populations, ecological communities and ecosystems. Together they study animal, plant and microbial ecology in terrestrial and freshwater environments. The multidisciplinary collaboration within this diverse group of ecologists has created unique opportunities to develop the broad, comprehensive approaches needed to solve complex ecological problems.

The Netherlands Institute of Ecology supports Commonland’s mission and assists Commonland with technical advice and expertise upon request.

Presencing Institute

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The Presencing Institute of MIT Harvard is an awareness-based action-research community that creates social technologies, builds capacities, and generates holding spaces for profound societal renewal. They develop and disseminate tools that help change makers to create deep innovation and change.

The Presencing Institute has created a framework and methodology that allows diverse groups of stakeholders to co-sense, reinvent, and co-create the larger eco-systems in which they operate. This has been published in two books: Presence and Theory U. Their third book, Leading from the Emerging Future: From Ego-System to Eco-system Economies (2013), has set the stage for the next wave of action research, systems change, and collaborative renewal.

Theory U is used by Commonland to align all stakeholders in a deeper understanding of the returns of inspiration and social capital. The Presencing Institute gives guidance to the Commonland team on working with Theory U at a landscape level.

TEMA

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The Turkish Foundation for Combating Soil Erosion, for Reforestation and the Protection of Natural Habitats (TEMA) is Turkey’s largest and leading environmental NGO.

To fulfill its mission to create effective and conscious public opinion on environmental problems – specifically soil erosion, deforestation, desertification, climate change and biodiversity loss – TEMA operates at local, national and international level.

It organizes awareness-raising events and campaigns for community mobilization and empowerment; it implements educational activities and model projects of various scales; it intervenes in government policies for proper environmental protection and it conducts legal activities, both by legislation drafting and through its lawsuits.

TEMA is implementing restoration projects in Turkey and supports the mission of Commonland.

Tompkins Conservation

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For two decades, Tompkins Conservation has been creating national parks, recovering imperiled wildlife, implementing ecological agriculture, promoting healthy local communities, and supporting leading-edge activism.

They develop diverse programs around each unique place in which they work, but all efforts lead back to a common vision: big, secure, wild landscapes where all the native plants and animals thrive. Nearby, human communities flourish, their economic vitality linked to the vibrant good health of the natural world surrounding them.

The experiences of Tompkins Conservation in Latin America are a valuable tool to be shared within the Commonland team. Commonland works together with Tompkins Conservation at team level.

Utrecht University

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Established in 1636, Utrecht University has evolved into a leading modern research university with a growing international reputation. On the 2013 Shanghai Academic Ranking of World Universities, Utrecht University ranked first in the Netherlands, 13th in Europe and shared 52nd place in the world.

The Copernicus Institute of Utrecht University investigates and develops processes and opportunities for innovative change towards sustainability. The institute thus seeks to contribute to the development of knowledge and techniques as well as methods and instruments in the field of sustainable development, taking note of related social debates and policy processes.

It is the ambition of the institute to make a difference – in science and education, and in society at large – in the exploration of a sustainable world.

Wetlands International

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Wetlands International is the only global not-for-profit organization dedicated to the conservation and restoration of wetlands. Their vision is a world where wetlands are treasured and nurtured for their beauty, the life they support and the resources they provide.

Wetlands International is dedicated to maintaining and restoring wetlands for their environmental values as well as for the services they provide to people. They work through a network of offices, partners and experts. Wetlands International works at field level to develop and mobilize knowledge, and uses this practical experience to advocate better policies.

The experience of Wetlands International in wetland restoration is a key component of Commonland’s restoration toolkit. Through their expertise and international network, Wetlands International can work together with Commonland on local restoration projects.

World Land Trust

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World Land Trust is an international conservation charity, which protects the world’s most biologically important and threatened habitats hectare by hectare. Since its foundation in 1989, the World Land Trust has funded partner organizations around the world to create reserves, and give permanent protection to habitats and wildlife.

The mission of the World Land Trust is to protect and sustainably manage the world’s natural ecosystems and to conserve their biodiversity, with emphasis on threatened habitats and endangered species; to develop partnerships with local individuals, communities and organizations; to engage support and commitment among the people who live in project areas; to raise awareness, in the UK and elsewhere, of the need for conservation; and to improve understanding and generate support through education, information and fundraising.

The World Land Trust complements Commonland’s activities with support in the establishment of natural zones within the 4 returns landscape approach in large restoration business developments.

Deltares

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Deltares is an independent institute for applied research in the field of water, subsurface and infrastructure. Throughout the world, they work on smart solutions, innovations and applications for people, environment and society.

Their main focus is on deltas, coastal regions and river basins. As an applied research institute, the success of Deltares can be measured in the extent to which their expert knowledge can be used in and for society. For Deltares, the quality of their expertise and advice is foremost. Knowledge is their core business.

WASWAC

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The World Association of Soil and Water Conservation (WASWAC) is a worldwide academic society, founded in the USA in August 1983.

Since its establishment, the WASWAC has devoted itself to research and communication to solve scientific and technical problems related to soil and water conservation. So far, 1,125 members from 82 countries have joined WASWAC to pool their efforts. WASWAC has conducted many technical cooperative research projects; organized a series of international training courses, symposia and workshops; and set up and sponsored several awards in the field of soil and conservation.

WASWAC welcomes future cooperation and collaboration with sister organizations – including governmental bodies, research institutes, universities and consultants in soil and conservation-related fields all over the world – in promoting the application of wise soil and water management practices. The aim of which is to improve and safeguard the quality of land and water resources so they continue to meet the needs of agriculture, society and nature.

APG Asset Management

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APG manages the pension assets of around 4.5 million Dutch citizens for its clients. APG firmly believes that participants benefit from a collective pension system. They support this pension system with their knowledge and expertise.

APG considers sustainability to be increasingly important because companies that incorporate sustainability in their strategic agenda adapt more easily to the changing environment, because sustainability yields cost savings and because sustainability enhances a company’s attractiveness as an employer and increases labor productivity.

Baker & McKenzie

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Baker & McKenzie defined the global law firm in the 20th century, and are redefining it to meet the challenges of the global economy in the 21st.

They bring to matters the global perspective and market knowledge and insights of more than 4,200 locally admitted lawyers in 77 offices worldwide. Since 1949, they have advised leading corporations on the issues of today’s integrated world market.

Baker & McKenzie gave pro bono advice during the start up phase of Commonland and is providing legal expertise on a case-by-case basis.

Egon Zehnder

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Egon Zehnder is a trusted advisor to many of the world’s most respected organizations and a leading executive search firm. Their clients range from the largest corporations to emerging growth companies, government and regulatory bodies, and major educational and cultural institutions.

Their core services include executive search, board consulting, and leadership strategy services. Egon Zehnder was founded in 1964 with two distinctive aims: to place the interests of their clients first, and to lead their profession in creating value for their clients.

Egon Zehnder supports Commonland’s mission and assists in developing the international business network.

Enviu

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Enviu kick-starts impact-driven companies; companies aimed at creating environmental and social impact. The products and services of their start-ups aim to improve the quality of life of as many people as possible in a sustainable way.

Enviu has two core activities: co-creation and business development. Through co-creation they generate business concepts together with their community of entrepreneurs and innovators. They then act as a risk-taking partner with the entrepreneurs that have the most promising concepts and make them investor ready.

Enviu support Commonland’s mission and partners in the quest for restoration companies.

Eosta

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Eosta is an international distributor of fresh organic fruits, vegetables and juices, with a focus on overseas fruits and greenhouse crops. They maintain a close working relationship with more than a thousand growers on six continents.

Their ‘trace and tell’ system, Nature & More, provides consumers with transparency about organic products. Their core values of responsibility, togetherness and authenticity are at the heart of their innovative approach.

Eosta supports Commonland’s mission and can assist in promoting and developing organic products.

FMO

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FMO is the Dutch development bank that finances entrepreneurs from developing countries because they believe a thriving, sustainable private sector fuels economic and social progress. Their mission is to empower entrepreneurs to build a better world.

They finance companies, projects and financial institutions from developing and emerging markets. They believe that entrepreneurship is key in creating sustainable economic growth and improving people’s quality of life. FMO specializes in sectors where their contribution can have the highest long-term impact.

Form International

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Form International is a Dutch forestry-consulting firm established in 1992. It is ISO 9001 certified and offers high quality advice on forest management, certification and technical assistance to plantation establishment and management.

Sustainable commercial forest exploitation is one of the viable options to maintain important forest functions, while adding value to the forest and preserving it. Form International has extensive experience in tropical forest management, mainly in West and Central Africa, and is also active in Europe on Chain-of-Custody certification and PEFC conformity assessments.

Form International supports Commonland’s mission and can assist in the implementation of restoration projects.

Groasis

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Groasis is a socially active and environmental friendly enterprise based in the Netherlands. They are successfully planting trees in over 30 countries with extremely dry and hot climates.

The Groasis Technology is extremely efficient with water and helps the planter save money with eco-restoration, while – if the plantation is for agroforestry – also allowing the planter to make more money.

Groasis supports Commonland’s mission. They develop tools that can be used in semi-arid areas to plant trees without irrigation.

McKinsey & Company

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McKinsey & Company is a global management-consulting firm. They are the trusted advisor to the world’s leading businesses, governments and institutions.

They use the intellectual, financial and convening power of their firm to help address some of the world’s most pressing problems. They do this through their work with private, public and social sector organizations, through their investments in research on topics such as education and through their extensive pro bono and volunteer work.

They draw on their functional and industry expertise to support organizations that are seeking to tackle the toughest societal challenges. Each year, they help leading foundations, nonprofits, and multilateral institutions to address issues such as disease, poverty, climate change and natural disasters.

McKinsey & Company gave pro bono advice during the start up phase of Commonland.

Land Life Company

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The Land Life Company fills a void by providing professional, low-cost and biodegradable products to improve the ecological and esthetic value of land. The objective of the Land Life Company is to make a material contribution in the form of large restoration projects (1,000 hectares and more) and landscaping projects in dry climates.

Achieving this objective will enhance the quality of ecosystems through improved water management, enriched biodiversity, reduced soil erosion and increased dust and CO2 absorption. Perhaps most importantly, it will help to build local economies and communities and form a source of pride and inspiration for people.

The Land Life Company supports Commonland’s mission. They develop tools that can be used in semi-arid areas to plant trees without irrigation.

Santam

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Santam is widely regarded as the leading and most trusted brand in the South African short-term insurance industry. As part of the largest general insurance group in Africa, Santam currently holds a local market share of 23%.

Key to its success is Santam’s unyielding commitment to providing insurance good and proper. At Santam, they believe in a simple principle - that insurance is something that should add value and peace of mind, not questions, uncertainty, parameters or excuses.

Santam is committed to creating a stable and prosperous society and supports Commonland’s mission.

Library

In this library you will find a selection of publications and videos that give an introduction to landscape restoration. In addition, it also provides an overview of expert libraries that have compiled a large collection of articles, country reports, maps, books, guidelines and videos related to landscape restoration.

The story behind the Sankofa
The Commonland logo is derived from the image of the Sankofa. This Ghanese symbol represents the importance of learning from the past.

The original symbol shows a bird with its head turned backwards taking an egg
off its back. It symbolizes taking from the past what is good and bringing it into
the present in order to make positive progress through the use of knowledge.

At the same time the logo can be seens as a "C" representing the name
"Commonland" or as a graphic illustration of the world.